fantadomat
Arcane
No,it doesn't,it is retarded mechanic like coalitions! Clearly you have poor taste!Shattered Retreat >>> Ping Pong
No,it doesn't,it is retarded mechanic like coalitions! Clearly you have poor taste!Shattered Retreat >>> Ping Pong
Shattered Retreat has the kernel of a good idea, but the shittiest implementation possible.
Will there be shattered retreat?
During medieval period there were such thing as Impenetrable Castle, which were taken by tricks and treachery only, but never with direct assault or siege. And during Henry II most "castles" were wooden shit with moat at best. And even in their case they were mostly starved, not assaulted.
Quiz time: How many sieges in the whole Middle ages have lasted a year (or more)?
Of these, only Calais can count as a proper siege. Citation needed on Philadelphia. As far as I know Philadelphia was taken in 1390 without serious trouble. Thessaloniki was a blockade, not a real tight siege, and the city was being resupplied which allowed it to hold on for that long.Quiz time: How many sieges in the whole Middle ages have lasted a year (or more)?
Quick search didn't bring up very many. The Byzantines held Philadelphia against the Turks for 12 years before the city fell in 1390. The Venetians managed to hold out against the Turks for 8 years at Thessalonica about half a century later. Calais siege in 1346 was almost a year long, at around 330 days.
There were also a few long sieges during the Japanese Feudal wars, but those were in the 1500s, not really in the middle age era. Screw it, I'm tired of hunting. I'll go with the 2 I could find.
Of these, only Calais can count as a proper siege. Citation needed on Philadelphia. As far as I know Philadelphia was taken in 1390 without serious trouble. Thessaloniki was a blockade, not a real tight siege, and the city was being resupplied which allowed it to hold on for that long.Quiz time: How many sieges in the whole Middle ages have lasted a year (or more)?
Quick search didn't bring up very many. The Byzantines held Philadelphia against the Turks for 12 years before the city fell in 1390. The Venetians managed to hold out against the Turks for 8 years at Thessalonica about half a century later. Calais siege in 1346 was almost a year long, at around 330 days.
There were also a few long sieges during the Japanese Feudal wars, but those were in the 1500s, not really in the middle age era. Screw it, I'm tired of hunting. I'll go with the 2 I could find.
2. Fall of Philadelphia 1378 – 1390
When the Byzantine civil war turned disastrous, the Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos promised the city of Philadelphia to the Turks. However, the residents of Philadelphia were not so keen on this idea and managed to resist the invaders for an impressive 12 years before the city was finally taken by the Turkish forces.
They really did resist, as in, the city remained nominally independent, although fully encircled by lands subordinate to the Ottomans. However, they had made no attempt to take it prior to 1390 that I know of. It was not "under siege" and communications were not cut.Of these, only Calais can count as a proper siege. Citation needed on Philadelphia. As far as I know Philadelphia was taken in 1390 without serious trouble. Thessaloniki was a blockade, not a real tight siege, and the city was being resupplied which allowed it to hold on for that long.Quiz time: How many sieges in the whole Middle ages have lasted a year (or more)?
Quick search didn't bring up very many. The Byzantines held Philadelphia against the Turks for 12 years before the city fell in 1390. The Venetians managed to hold out against the Turks for 8 years at Thessalonica about half a century later. Calais siege in 1346 was almost a year long, at around 330 days.
There were also a few long sieges during the Japanese Feudal wars, but those were in the 1500s, not really in the middle age era. Screw it, I'm tired of hunting. I'll go with the 2 I could find.
https://www.historyanswers.co.uk/ancient/the-5-longest-sieges-in-history/
2. Fall of Philadelphia 1378 – 1390
When the Byzantine civil war turned disastrous, the Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos promised the city of Philadelphia to the Turks. However, the residents of Philadelphia were not so keen on this idea and managed to resist the invaders for an impressive 12 years before the city was finally taken by the Turkish forces.
(or probably leaving on purpose for future DLC knowing paradox )
If I pour enough money into my castle I want it to be an absolute nightmare to try and take. That doesn't mean it's impenetrable, just that it's extremely fortified to the point that you're either going to spend a year trying to starve me out or lose 10,000 men storming the walls.
In the early middle ages very few armies could stay in the field for more than a couple of months at a time. A castle only needed to hold out a while until the besiegers were forced to return home.
The thing is, I don't think that could be replicated in at least CK2, as all you need to do in Paradox games to avoid attrition is to spread your army out into smaller forces in other provinces which ignores hard counters like food, things which in EU result in silliness like large armies staying intact rushing across the Sahara or Amazon instead of collapsing from massive loss of life.